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The Roadmap

Republicans, who have capitalized on the burgeoning public anger over
debt, face their own test on the issue if they manage to take the House back
this fall. One of their own, the ranking member of the House Budget
Committee, expects the GOP to put its money where its mouth is if the party
wins back control, and put the fiscal house in order. Rep. Paul RyanPaul Davis RyanThree-way clash set to dominate Democratic debateKrystal Ball touts Sanders odds in TexasRepublicans pour cold water on Trump's term limit ideaMORE (R-Wis.)
started working on his "Roadmap," a blueprint for fiscal
solvency, nearly a decade ago, back when his party ran Washington. Republicans
were tearing through budget surpluses back then but Ryan could see the
trajectory of entitlement spending, of government as a percentage of GDP, of an
aging population's health benefits far outpacing the growth of wages. He could
see what he describes as a coming tsunami.

You should visit Ryan's website
and learn why, though we aren't Greece, the United States is stuck on
a similar path of unsustainable government spending and can't
keep it up for long.
Democrats are busy attacking Ryan's plan as the end of the safety net, and Ryan
and his deft and determined team fight back quickly, armed with details, every
time. Political consultants have told him from the start he should stay away
from any discussion of entitlement reforms, and he has ignored them all along,
running on his Roadmap for reelection for years in the 1st district of
Wisconsin, where this year he does not yet have an opponent.

"I've been rally pleasantly surprised and excited about how well-received it has been, because people are hungry for somebody to tackle the
problem," Ryan told me in a recent interview. "They may not agree
with these specific solutions, but they're just happy you're trying and I think
people will be rewarded for that."

Ryan said we can't balance the budget soon, but that budget reforms like his
could alter the trajectory we are on. And time is slipping away. Ryan
won't insist that his party rally around his Roadmap. But, as
I explained in my column this week,
he wants Republicans to find the political might to finally wage the budget
reform battle they have spoken of for so long.

"Does our party have the guts to stand up and be for the
specific set of ideas and reforms really necessary to prevent the debt
crisis from hitting us, or are we just going to live like we have
been before, being intimidated from taking these things on?"
Ryan said. "If we do, then we're going to be a welfare state."